Wednesday, 28 January 2015

(Accepting first the characterisation of the U.S. as a "normal country".)

Litvinenko's eyebrows and body hair do not appear to have fallen out -

The clear and obvious implication being, his head has been shaved.

Nor does his wife display the kind of behaviour expected of a bereaved widow of a murdered husband and father, even one perusing an irrational vendetta against Putin.

She isn't even upset.

It's just an act.

A VicSim of 9/11

The VicSims of MH-17

The Effects of DiOxin (Agent Orange) poisoning during The so-called Orange Revolution of 2004.

Never let it be said that NATO Intelligence and the natural heirs of PERMINDEX have no sense of humour.

"In the late 1980s, under Gorbachev, Generals Bobkov and Kondaurov sponsored several bright young “Russian’ entrepreneurs, and arranged for them to work with a group of consultants out of Switzerland know as Riggs-Valmet. [170]

This was the very same Riggs operation set up by George Bush in 1988 under the watchful eye of his brother and former National Security Council director. The names of these first generation oligarchs were :

Mikhail Khordokovsky

Alexander Konanykhine

Boris Berezovsky (Berezovskii)

Roman Abramovich

Alexander Konanykhine would be responsible for up to half of the campaign financing for an unknown Russian Congressman from the remote regions of Russia known as Boris Yeltsin. Yeltsin would win the election and become President of Russia.

Under KGB protection, Konanykhine opened a series of banks used for moving Russian money out of Russia, most notably the Russian Exchange Bank, the European Union Bank and his partnership with Mikhail Khordokovsky in the Bank Menatep.

The European Union Bank was actually a money laundering operation in Antigua run as an internet bank. The computers used to operate the bank were traced to Val Kulkov, an associate of Konanykhine, at Suite 347, 1429 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington DC. The internet address for the bank belonged to a block of Internet addresses owned by a company called Aegis.

Thayer Equity Investors, of 1445 Pennsylvania Avenue, which controlled Aegis at the time, is located on the third floor of the same building. Thayer Equity’s address was also used at one time by the Hohlt Group, which now resides at 1433 Pennsylvania Avenue, virtually right down the hallway.

Interest is taken in these groups, because the men who control them are major financial power brokers of the U.S. Republican Party: Frederick Malek (Thayer Equity ) and Richard Hohlt (the Hohlt Group). Hohlt is a reported associate of Richard Armitage.

Oligarch Mikhail Khordokovsky would be responsible for setting up the primary financial organization for taking over Russian oil and gas industries, as well as moving money out of the country: Bank Menatep. Over time, Riggs would reduce its control of Bank Menatep from 51% to a public 4%, although total ownership of the institution remains cloaked by offshore privacy allowances.

Khordokovsky’s dealings would also involve a takeover of the gas industry: Gazprom, and with it AEB, which had been originally controlled by Palmer and Lauder.

Oligarch Roman Abramovich worked with Valmet-Riggs to buy into the Siberian oil giant Sibneft. [171] Abramovich started with an energy trading company called Runicom which was owned totally by Valmet-Riggs. The true beneficial owners of Runicom were never disclosed. [172]

Abramovich ran his operations out of the offices of one of the Swiss subsidiaries of Bruce Rappaport, the former BCCI and Iran-Contra banker. Their start-up business was trading oil and gas. As part of his trades, he would soon engage and partner with Oligarch Boris Berezovsky.

Oligarch Boris Berezovsky reportedly received his start as a used car dealer, with strong Mafia connections. He too would be reported to have received guidance from Riggs-Valmet, and would become partners with Roman Abramovich. His role appears to have been providing the ‘muscle’ behind various financial takeovers where there was a reluctance to sell.

The four of them would control the Russian oil and gas industry, and be front men for the hidden beneficiaries set up under the guidance of the consultants of Riggs-Valmet. This report speculates that the hidden beneficiaries, if ever found, would ultimately expose the illegal beneficiaries of the Black Eagle Trust, Project Hammer etc., and would be one and the same as the beneficiaries of the $240 billion security clearance in the aftermath of September 11th.

South of Russia, in Kazakhstan, President Nursultan Nazarbayev was working initially with James Giffen to open the oil flow to western economies. Shortly after Giffen established a foothold, Nazarbayev was working with Shaul Eisenberg, Marc Rich, Dick Cheney and George Soros.

The FBI investigation into James Giffen’s activities that might have violated the U.S. Corrupt Practices act had its records stored on the 23rd Floor office of the FBI in the World Trade Center. The scope of the Giffen trial was limited by the court to activities from 1994 and forward, against the protests of Giffen’s lawyers.

The lawyers contended they needed the scope of Giffen’s activities opened as far back as 1991, so that Giffen could show he was working under White House directives. Pulitzer prize winner Seymour Hersh reported that there were thousands of illegal oil swaps made during the early years under President Nazarbayev’s – but none of these ever came to light during the Giffen trial. [173] "

"Putin believes that he has a Fifth Column in Moscow...

Err... Am I allowed to call them "Zionists"...?"

- Gordon Duff, Red Ice Radio, 2104

Ukrainian Military Shootdown (?) of Siberia Airlines Flight 1812 - October 4th 2001 from Spike EP on Vimeo.
Toronto comments, December 4 2001 : "Israeli biological and nuclear scientists are being knocked off one by one and this covert war is going unnoticed. A plane carrying scientists to Russia's biological warfare center at Novosibirsk was blown up over the Black Sea and no one questions that the Ukrainian missile that supposedly did the job was a hundred miles out of range. Then a Swissair Corsair crashes killing the head of Ichilov Hospital's Hematology department, as well as directors of the Hebrew University School Of Medicine and the Tel Aviv Public Health Department and not a word of suspicion is raised. After that, one of the country's most prominent nuclear scientists, Baruch Zinger is assassinated and still, no one is putting the pieces together. Your front line against nuclear and biological attacks is being picked off in a covert murder campaign and your government is taking no security precautions to stop the intellectual slaughter. Or if it is, your public is totally unaware of the daily danger to its most educated citizens."

Ukraine finally admitted yesterday that its military shot down a Russian airliner that crashed into the Black Sea last week, killing all 78 passengers and crew.

Evhen Marchuk, the chairman of Ukraine's security council, conceded that the plane had probably been brought down by "an accidental hit from an S-200 rocket fired during exercises". Russian investigators believe a missile exploded near the plane, spraying it with shrapnel. Russian and Israeli scientists found metal pellets in the victims and in the fuselage.

Vladimir Rushailo, the chairman of Russia's security council, said: "The investigation has found that the disaster resulted from a strike by a warhead from an anti-aircraft missile."

Although both Russia and Ukraine were almost certainly aware of the cause from the start, it took eight days for Ukraine to accept responsibility.

Last year four people were killed when a Ukrainian rocket hit a block of flats.

"Kondaurov and Alexandre Konanykhine would bring a here-to-fore unknown politician and construction foreman named Boris Yeltsin from the hinterlands of Russia to the forefront of Russian politics through generous campaign financing, providing 50% of Yeltsin’s campaign funding. In the meantime, Riggs Bank was quickly solidifying banking relations with a couple more of the old Iran-Contra scandal participants: Swiss bankers Bruce Rappaport, and Alfred Hartmann.

It is through this group that George Soros was engaged, who then opened a second front assault on the ruble. Rappaport and Hartmann would also extend their operations network to include of the Bank of New York, and from Israel, The Eisenberg Group.

It is at this stage of the operation that three more groups would be brought into the plan by Rappaport and Hartmann: The Russian Mafiya, the Israeli Mossad, and the Rothschild family interests represented by Jacob Rothschild.

Soros and Rapport would ensure that the Rothschild financial interests would be the silent backers for a number of the undisclosed deals. By example, ten years later when Vladimir Putin sent Khordokovsky to prison for money laundering and tax evasion, Khordokovsky would identify Jacob Rothschild as his major silent partner, and ‘sign over’ his shares in the oil giant Yukos to Rothschild before he went to prison. [155]

The Rothschild interests would also been seen on the board of directors of Barrick Gold, which may have been used to launder Russian and Philippines treasury gold, and later on the Board of the mercenary operation Diligence whose Russian arm would be a Russian mercenary operation known as Farwest Ltd. [156] Farwest was controlled by Anton Surikov, another ex KGB/CIA agent sponsored by Bobkov and Kondaurov.

Rappaport would also introduce an American gentleman named “Bob Klein” to the Russians and his Bank of New York partners. Klein worked with the operation for several years, and when the Feds began its inquiries into the Bank of New York money-laundering scandal in the late 1990s, no one could prove Bob Klein ever existed, and he simply vanished. [157]

No one ever thought to suggest that the presence of this “spook” indicated this was an intelligence operation from the very beginning.

"Officials had previously said he tested positive for traces of polonium-210.

However, his friend Paolo Guzzanti told the BBC that doctors had told Mr Scaramella he was going to die.

Mr Scaramella was one of the last people to meet Mr Litvinenko, a Russian former spy, before his death last month, which is being linked to the discovery of polonium-210.

Mr Litvinenko's wife Marina is also said to have been "very slightly contaminated" but is not ill.

The polonium trail: - Key locations

The trail of radioactive contamination following the murder of former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko in November 2006 has taken detectives all over London, as well as to locations in Hamburg and Moscow.

Here are the key sites that have formed the major part of the investigation, where radioactive substances have been found.

University College Hospital: Where Mr Litvinenko died on 23 November - cleared for public use

1 Cavendish Place: Remediation work completed - cleared for public use

25 and 58 Grosvenor Street: 25 - cleared for public use, 58 - cleared for public use

Best Western Hotel: Rooms isolated for remediation work - cleared for public use

Millennium Hotel: Where Mr Litvinenko met associates shortly before he became ill - cleared after work

Italian Mario Scaramella, 36, has been a significant figure in an Italian espionage probe.

He has advised the Italian Senate's Guzzanti committee, examining claims by Soviet defector Alexander Mitrokhin about KGB operations in the country.

As consultant to the committee the former environmentalist came into contact with Mr Litvinenko.

The pair would exchange information about Soviet-era activities in Italy.

Mr Litvinenko would also pass on information about what he thought his former spying colleagues were up to nowadays in Western Europe.

Mr Scaramella headed a body called the Environmental Crime Prevention Programme (ECPP), an organisation which tracked dumped nuclear waste, including Soviet nuclear missiles left over from the Cold War.

Between 2000 and 2002, Mr Scaramella was secretary general of that body.

Sensational tales

In 2003 he made the unusual move from environmentalist to KGB expert for the Guzzanti committee's probe into post-World War II Soviet spying in Italy.

Many of his claims have been headline grabbing - including one in March 2005 when he said 20 Soviet nuclear warheads had been dumped by a USSR submarine in the Bay of Naples during the Cold War.

And last year he tipped off Italian police after saying he had been offered a suitcase of nuclear material for sale by a Ukrainian national.

“ The Scaramella file resembles a story from a spy novel ”

BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner

At the time Mr Scaramella said he was investigating the activities of former KGB officers in the tiny Adriatic coast republic of San Marino.

He said he had been passed a document saying there were former KGB men in San Marino looking at selling nuclear military material. A garage in Rimini was raided and four men arrested.

He also said a tip-off from Mr Litvinenko helped prevent a potential attempt on the life of Paolo Guzzanti, a member of Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia party who is heading the probe into the Mitrokhin material.

The BBC's security expert Frank Gardner said: "The Scaramella file resembles a story from a spy novel.

"He is a 'self-styled' security expert - a change from being an environmentalist. He has been specialising in investigating the Russian intelligence service in Italy."

The Italian government has officially denied that Mr Scaramella works for Italy's secret service SISMI.

Ex-Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko died in a London hospital on 23 November 2006 from radiation poisoning.

Here are some of the key events leading up to and since his death.

1 NOVEMBER 2006

Mr Litvinenko meets two Russian men at a London hotel - one a former KGB officer.

He also meets academic Mario Scaramella at a sushi bar where he is said to have received documents about the death of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya.

Several hours after his meetings, Mr Litvinenko complains of feeling sick and spends the night vomiting.

4 NOVEMBER

After three days of sickness and stomach pains Mr Litvinenko is admitted to Barnet General Hospital, north London.

11 NOVEMBER

On the BBC Russian Service, Mr Litvinenko describes being in "very bad shape" after a "serious poisoning".

17 NOVEMBER

Mr Litvinenko is transferred to the University College Hospital, in central London, as his condition worsens. He is placed under armed police guard.

19 NOVEMBER

It is reported Mr Litvinenko was poisoned with thallium, a highly toxic chemical once used to poison rats.

20 NOVEMBER

Mr Litvinenko is moved to intensive care. Pictures are released of the ex-agent in hospital, showing how he has suffered dramatic weight and hair loss.

Scotland Yard's counter-terrorism unit takes over the investigation into what made him ill. Police say they are treating the case as a suspected "deliberate poisoning" but await toxicology test results.

The Kremlin dismisses allegations Russia's government poisoned Mr Litvinenko because of his criticisms of its policies as "sheer nonsense".

21 NOVEMBER

There is confusion over what happened to make Mr Litvinenko ill.

Professor John Henry, a toxicologist, says Mr Litvinenko may have been poisoned with "radioactive thallium".

Doctors directly responsible for his treatment say Mr Litvinenko's illness is unlikely to have been caused by ordinary thallium poisoning.

Mario Scaramella tells a news conference in Italy that he had met the Russian in a Sushi bar earlier in the month to discuss e-mail threats they had received.

22 NOVEMBER

Mr Litvinenko is described as "critically ill".

Dr Geoff Bellingan, director of critical care at University College Hospital, rules out thallium as the cause of his sickness.

Russia's foreign intelligence service denies involvement in the apparent poisoning of Mr Litvinenko.

The ex-agent has a heart attack overnight.

23 NOVEMBER

Mr Litvinenko dies in intensive care.

Scotland Yard says it is now investigating "an unexplained death".

24 NOVEMBER

A statement made by Mr Litvinenko before he died is read out by his friend Alex Goldfarb outside University College Hospital, London.

In it he accuses Russian President Vladimir Putin of involvement in his death and says his killer was "barbaric and ruthless".

Protest from around the world "will reverberate, Mr Putin, in your ears for the rest of your life," he said.

Friend Andrei Nekrasov says that just hours before Mr Litvinenko fell unconscious, he told him: "The bastards got me but they won't get everybody."

Mr Putin, at a press conference, says Mr Litvinenko's death was a tragedy, but he saw no "definitive proof" that it was a "violent death".

Mr Litvinenko's father Walter tells reporters his son was killed by a "tiny little nuclear bomb".

Police find traces of radioactive material at the sushi bar and the hotel where the former spy had meetings on 1 November, and at his north London home.

25 NOVEMBER

Tests are to be carried out on people who may have come into contact with Mr Litvinenko, including those who were at the Itsu sushi bar in London.

Police were searching the sushi bar and a bedroom at the Millennium Hotel.

26 NOVEMBER

Hundreds of people contact the NHS Direct hotline to seek advice about potential radiation poisoning.

27 NOVEMBER

In an emergency statement in the Commons, Home Secretary John Reid tells MPs the Russian ambassador was called to the Foreign Office at the end of last week to "convey to the Russian authorities our expectation that they should be ready to offer all necessary co-operation to the investigation".

Police confirm traces of radioactive polonium-210 have been discovered at two more central London addresses - Grosvenor Street, Mayfair and Down Street in West London.

Three people linked to the central London venues Mr Litvinenko visited on 1 November are referred to a clinic for radiological tests, after reporting possible radiation symptoms.

28 NOVEMBER

The Health Protection Agency (HPA) announces that eight people have been referred for tests after contacting NHS Direct.

A total of 1,121 people have called NHS Direct over the alert and 68 have been assessed as needing follow-up help, the HPA says.

It emerges Italian academic Mario Scaramella, who met Mr Litvinenko on the day he fell ill before returning to Italy, has travelled back to the UK to be tested.

Sources say police will also interview Mr Scaramella as a potential witness in the inquiry into the death.

Scotland Yard later confirms it is checking a further two addresses - the Sheraton Park Lane hotel and 58 Grosvenor St for traces of polonium-210.

Prime Minister Tony Blair says no "diplomatic or political barrier" will stand in the way of the police investigation.

29 NOVEMBER

Traces of a radioactive substance are found on two British Airways planes at Heathrow Airport.

The Boeing 767s, plus a third in Moscow, are to be tested and BA says it plans to contact the thousands of passengers who travelled on the European flights affected, including the London to Moscow route.

Meanwhile, Mr Scaramella says tests have cleared him of exposure to the deadly radioactive poison.

The HPA reveals that of the 4,000 staff at the two hospitals where the former spy was treated, 160 were assessed for possible exposure.

Foreign Office Minister Kim Howells tells MPs that Russian dissidents living in Britain "have the right to expect to be able to walk our streets without the fear of being murdered".

30 NOVEMBER

Home Secretary John Reid tells MPs traces of radioactivity had been discovered in 12 locations, as well as the two British Airways planes.

Mr Reid tells MPs that two Russian aircraft, one of which is currently at Heathrow airport, are also of interest.

The HPA says 24 people have been referred to a specialist clinic for tests.

An inquest into the death of Mr Litvinenko is opened and adjourned at a London court.

1 DECEMBER

Italian academic Mario Scaramella tests positive for a significant amount of polonium-210, although he has not suffered any symptoms of poisoning.

It is also revealed that Mr Litvinenko's wife Marina has tested positive for the alpha particle-emitting substance, although she is not admitted to hospital and is not believed to be in any danger.

A room is sealed off at Ashdown Park Hotel in Sussex.

In the wake of the alleged poisoning of former Russian Prime Minister Yegor Gaidar radiation tests are carried out in the Republic of Ireland.

4 DECEMBER

Nine British police officers travel to Moscow to pursue their investigation into Mr Litvinenko's death.

Further tests are carried out at a number of locations in central London.

The Parkes Hotel in Knightsbridge and an office in Cavendish Place are being examined.

Tests carried out by the Health Protection Agency (HPA) at the Best Western Hotel in Shaftesbury Avenue, London, find nothing of concern to public health.

The HPA say just over 3,000 people in the UK have now called the NHS Direct line since the radiation scare, with 179 being followed up for further investigation.

So far, 27 people have been referred as a precaution to a specialist outpatient clinic for radiological exposure assessment.

And a total of 70 urine samples, mainly from medical staff and ambulance workers, have been tested and found to be negative.

5 DECEMBER

Russia's prosecutor general Yuri Chaika says he will not extradite suspects in the poisoning of Mr Litvinenko to Britain.

Mr Chaika says any trial of a Russian citizen must take place in Russia and that it would be "impossible" for British officers to arrest Russians in their home country.

Russian prosecutors say they intend to question former KGB bodyguard Andrei Lugovoi, who met Mr Litvinenko in London on 1 November.

A room at the British Embassy in Moscow is tested as a precaution, after Mr Lugovoi's visit to the building last week. Mr Lugovoi is reported to be in hospital.

6 DECEMBER

British police say they are now treating the death of Alexander Litvinenko as murder.

Radiation is found at the British embassy in Moscow following precautionary tests on the building.

The embassy says there is no danger to public health.

Mr Scaramella is discharged from University College Hospital. Doctors say he had not shown any sign of illness.

The Health Protection Agency confirms staff at the Itsu sushi restaurant have all tested negative for radiation.

7 DECEMBER

Russia says it is investigating the attempted murder of Dmitry Kovtun, a contact of Mr Litvinenko who met him at the Pine Bar in London's Millennium Hotel on 1 November.

Reports that Mr Kovtun is in a critical condition spark speculation he too may have been poisoned.

A lawyer linked to him denies he is unwell.

All seven bar staff working at the Pine Bar at the time test positive for low levels of polonium-210.

Meanwhile, about 50 mourners - including his wife, son and parents - see Mr Litvinenko buried at North London's Highgate Cemetery.

8 DECEMBER

More than 200 people who visited the Pine Bar on 1 November will be offered tests for radiation, it emerges.

9 DECEMBER

Police in Germany say they have found indications of radiation in two properties apparently used by Dmitry Kovtun - the Hamburg flat of his ex-wife, and her mother's home outside the city.

Officials in Moscow say Russian police may travel to Britain as part of their parallel investigation.

10 DECEMBER

Mr Litvinenko's widow Marina says she believes the Russian authorities could have been behind his murder in an interview with the Mail on Sunday.

She tells the paper: "Obviously it was not Putin himself, of course not."

But she says what President Putin "does around him in Russia makes it possible to kill a British person" in Britain.

The Metropolitan Police says two of the 26 police officers closely involved in the Litvinenko inquiry have tested positive for "relatively small" levels of polonium-210, within safety limits.

10 DECEMBER

A British detective arrives in Hamburg to be briefed by German police on their investigation into traces of polonium-210 found at various residences.

Four people close to Dmitry Kovtun also test positive for the radioactive substance. They are his ex-wife, her partner and two children.

And in Moscow, British detectives and officials from the Russian Prosecutor General's office reportedly interview ex-KGB bodyguard Andrei Lugovoi, who is currently in hospital.

16 DECEMBER

Ex-spy Yuri Shvets claims Mr Litvinenko was murdered because of information he held on a powerful Kremlin figure.

Mr Shvets, a former business associate of the murdered former KGB man, says he was poisoned after the dossier which had damaging details was deliberately leaked to the high-ranking Moscow figure.

24 DECEMBER

Mr Scaramella is arrested in Naples, Italy, as part of an investigation into arms trafficking and violating state secrets. Scotland Yard say the arrest is not connected to the investigation into Mr Litvinenko's death.

27 DECEMBER

Russia's chief prosecutor says he is investigating whether a former boss of oil firm Yukos, Leonid Nevzlin, may be linked to the death of Mr Litvinenko.

Two more people in London test positive for polonium-210, health officials announce.

The people affected are a staff member at the Best Western Hotel, Piccadilly, and a guest at the Millennium Hotel's Pine Bar in Mayfair, both in central London.

It takes the total number of people affected by the radioactive substance to 12.

5 JANUARY

Polonium-210 is detected at another restaurant - the Pescatori in Mayfair, central London - health officials say.

Police had asked the Health Protection Agency to monitor the establishment as it was "linked to the Litvinenko police investigation".

The agency says there is no reason for public health concern over the discovery.

11 JANUARY

The Health Protection Agency reveals that 120 of the 596 people tested for polonium-210 showed traces of radiation.

But it says just 13 of those who tested positive following Mr Litvinenko's death are deemed to have a health risk, and that the long-term risk is very small.

The agency says it has identified 450 people worldwide who may have been affected by radiation, and is working with 48 different countries on the matter.

12 JANUARY

Russian prosecutors ask the UK for permission to question more than 100 witnesses over the poisoning of Mr Litvinenko.

Russia's deputy chief prosecutor Alexander Zvyagintsev also says Russian investigators want to examine "dozens" of places in Britain in connection with the former agent's death.

16 JANUARY

British detectives investigating Mr Litvinenko's death have asked to return to Moscow to carry out further inquiries, it is reported.

Russian's prosecutor general Yuri Chaika is quoted as saying he does not rule out another visit from UK investigators, after Russian investigators have visited Britain.

22 JANUARY

BBC One's Panorama programme reports there may have been multiple attempts to kill Mr Litvinenko before he died.

It says the first attempt to poison him may have come two weeks before he met Mario Scaramella in a sushi bar on 1 November.

The programme says it may have been at the same restaurant, but when Mr Litvinenko met former KGB men Andrei Lugovoi and Dimitri Kovtun on 16 October.

Panorama adds that although it was widely reported that Mr Scaramella had tested positive for polonium-210, it has discovered his initial test results were inaccurate. Subsequent tests proved negative.

Mr Litvinenko's widow Marina tells the programme her husband's poisoning could not have been carried out without Russian President Vladimir Putin's knowledge, but Mr Putin's spokesman Dimitry Peskov vehemently denies this.

26 JANUARY

Andrei Lugovoi laughs off reports London may soon seek his extradition.

He tells the BBC he has not read a Guardian newspaper report which claims Scotland Yard has allegedly collected enough evidence for him to stand trial in the UK.

The former KGB officer has persistently denied any involvement in the murder.

He goes on to refuse to comment on the possibility of being extradited to Britain or that he could be swapped with the London-based Russian exile Boris Berezovsky, a leading opponent of President Vladimir Putin.

30 JANUARY

Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun, the two Russian businessmen questioned by British police over the poisoning of Mr Litvinenko, deny being suspects in the case.

They tell a Russian TV station that UK press reports describing them as suspects were "a lie".

Mr Litvinenko had met the men hours before falling ill.

In their first joint TV interview, the men tell Russia Today they are witnesses, not suspects.

Mr Lugovoi and Mr Kovtun, both businessmen and former members of the Russian security services, were taken to hospital with suspected radiation poisoning in December.

31 JANUARY

Scotland Yard hands a file on the investigation into the death of Mr Litvinenko to the Crown Prosecution Service.

The BBC's security correspondent Frank Gardner says police sources have told him that the "finger of suspicion" pointed "clearly" at former KGB officer Andrei Lugovoi.

But Mr Lugovoi has said he was also a victim of radiation poisoning.

Police say they cannot reveal the contents of the file.

Prosecutors will consider whether there is sufficient evidence to charge anyone over Mr Litvinenko's death.

4 FEBRUARY

The Home Office confirms Russian detectives investigating Mr Litvinenko's death have asked for permission to come to the UK.

The Metropolitan Police said a decision on whether to agree to the request would be made "in due course".

6 FEBRUARY

Boris Berezovsky breaks his silence to tell BBC's Newsnight that Andrei Lugovoi was responsible for the death of his close friend, Mr Litvinenko.

He says Mr Litvinenko told him: "I think Lugovoi is involved in my poison," but the former KGB agent denies any involvement.

7 FEBRUARY

Alexander Gusak, a former head of the FSB - the successor of the KGB - says Mr Litvinenko was a "direct traitor" for betraying other Russian agents to British intelligence.

He told BBC's Newsnight show that in Soviet times Mr Litvinenko would have been sentenced to death, and under current law would face up to 20 years in prison for treason.

Mr Gusak says one of the agents who believed he had been exposed by Mr Litvinenko offered to assassinate the former spy.

He also confirms claims made by Mr Litvinenko of a plan to kill Russian oligarch, Boris Berezovsky, in 1997.

8 FEBRUARY

Two more people test positive for polonium-210, the Health Protection Agency announces.

One of them had been inside the Millennium Hotel in Mayfair while the other was a member of staff at the Sheraton Park Lane Hotel on the day Mr Litvinenko visited both and was contaminated.

It brings the number of people affected by polonium-210 and facing possible health risks to 15.

30 MARCH

Russian billionaire, Boris Berezovsky, who lives in exile in Britain, is questioned about the death of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko.

He said he agreed to be questioned, but insisted on security precautions for his own safety.

3 APRIL

The wife and friends of Mr Litvinenko launch a justice foundation in his name.

His widow Marina, close friend Alex Goldfarb and Boris Berezovsky hope the foundation will assist investigations into his death.

22 MAY

Andrei Lugovoi should be charged with the murder of Mr Litvinenko, the director of public prosecutions recommends.

Sir Ken Macdonald says that Mr Lugovoi, who denies involvement in the death, should face trial.

31 MAY

Speaking at a news conference in Moscow, Mr Lugovoi said Mr Litvinenko was not his enemy and that he had nothing against him. He claimed that Mr Litvinenko was a British spy.

Mr Lugovoi also said the British secret service tried to recruit him to provide "compromising information" on President Putin.

3 JUNE

The widow of Mr Litvinenko dismisses claims that British secret services were involved in his death.

Marina Litvinenko says that accusations made by Mr Lugovoi, suspected by Britain of poisoning her husband, were "nonsense".

14 JUNE

The Russian prosecutor-general rules out extraditing Mr Lugovoi.

"Extradition is out of the question, because it contradicts our constitution," Yuri Chayka is quoted by the Itar-Tass news agency as saying.

15 JUNE

Russia launches a spying case in connection with statements made by Mr Lugovoi which accuse Mr Litvinenko and businessman Boris Berezovsky of having contacts with the UK secret service.

The Federal Security Service is behind the investigation but no suspects have been named by the authorities.

5 JULY

Russia officially refuses a UK extradition request for Mr Lugovoi.

The Russian Prosecutor General's Office said the constitution did not allow for the extradition of its citizens.

16 JULY

The government announces it is to expel four diplomats from the Russian embassy in London after Moscow refused to extradite Mr Lugovoi.

Foreign Secretary David Miliband also said co-operation with Russia on a range of issues was under review.

17 JULY

Moscow warns the UK to expect "serious consequences" after the expulsion of its diplomats and says the British authorities will be "adequately informed" of its feelings in time.

The Foreign Office said retaliation by Russia was not "justified."

Russian deputy foreign minister Alexander Grushko also said the diplomatic expulsions could jeopardise co-operation between the two nations on counter-terrorism.

19 JULY

Russia announces it is to expel four British embassy staff, mirroring the UK's decision to expel four staff from the Russian embassy in London.

The four are given 10 days to leave, and Moscow says it is also to review visa applications for UK officials.